OREGON CITY COURIER OREGON CITY HERALD CONSOLIDATED. A. V. CHENEY PublWba Interesting Collection of Item Many Place Called From the Pre Report or the Current Week. The last detachment of Spanish troops have sailed from Porto Rico and evacuation is complete. The Utah troop of oavalry, which has been doing guard duty in the Yosemite, lias been ordered to the Presidio. Ma jor-General .Wesley Merritt, U. S. A., was married privately in London to Miss Laura Williams, of Chioago. ' News has been received in Washing ton of the launching at Havre of the cruiser Bio de la Plata, which is to be presented to Spain by the Spanish resi dents of Argentina. The joint traffic association has re ceived a death-blow by the United States supreme oourt, which has just decided tnat its existence is unlawful, and the anti-trust law is being violated. A Madrid dispatch to the New York World says that leading men at Madrid . concede that America will not assume the Cuban debt, that the Philippines will probably be lost and that the American commissioners' demands in all matters will be aoceded to. ' Secretary Long has taken the initia tive steps to make San Juan de Porto Rico the first naval Station in the West . Indian waters. ' Congress will be asked to appropriate money enough to make it one of the best equipped naval sta tions the United States has. ' Serious trouble is brewing among the Comanche, Kiowa and Apache Indians. For 80 years, since the Medioine Lodge treaty, the government has fed these Indians, but that treaty expired July 1. . They have commenced killing oattle be longing to Texas cattlemen, and a crisis is near. : ' I The California superior court has decided that Mrs. Botkin, accused of the murder of Mrs. John P. Dunning and sister, of Dover, Del., is not a fugi tive from justice of Delaware. Mrs. Botkin haB been remanded in custody of the ohiet of police of San Pranoisoo, and the date of her trial w ill be set later. The president has approved the recommendation of Qoneral Wade, at Havana, that the Spaniards be allowed tintil December 1 to evacuate Cuba; meantime, however, United States troops now In Cuba and others to be dispatched will take possession of the territory as fust as the Spaniards vacate it, probably leaving Havana last. i The lockout in the window glass xrau' ai 'innnnr in Annan. I Sellow fever has been oomnlfitnlv . 1 - 'WUJjftJU uub HI VJUUIltttUUIUU. I Charles Kugadt was hanged at Hous EPITOME OF THE DISPATCHES ton, lex., lor tlie murder of his sister. I Fully 10,000 people participated in a reception to General Shafter at Lima, O. : The independent battalion of Wash ington volunteers has been mustered cat. ! Ex-Qovernor Charles Sheldon, of South Dakota, diod at Doadwood of rheumatism. Superintendent Lnkens, of the Chi-cago-Virden Coal Company has been released from custody on bonds. The wireworkers' strike at Cleve land, O., 1ms failed, and a general re sumption of work will soon follow. Battery B, Oregon voluntoeis, has boon mustered ont of service, nnd iu members returned to private life with out having the muoh-sought-for chance to battle for their country. Agoncillo. envoy of the Filipinos, lias reached Paris, In reply to a Span ish itHteineut, the American peace com missioners have declared . that the United States refuses to assume oiereignty over Cuba. A Havana dlspatoh says: An agree ment between the two commissions as to the date of evacuation again seerat probable. The American ultimatum fixes npon January 1, and this date will be finally accepted by the Span lurda. Lieutonant Peary's vessel is -naught in the loe, and there la little prospect that it will got out this year. The .present position of the steamer is much -further, north than whalers usually go. The vowel will return sufoly next epiing after the Ice thaws. , 1 A sensational story comes from Ha ana to the offeot that Captain-General Blanco together with other prominent Spaniards, had formed a plot to set up topublio iu Cuba, and eventually turn the island baok to Spain. Their plans were upset by the signing of the peace irotocol. Rev. Chas. noath, colored, is dead at Jiia home in New York city, aged 101 years. The first notable event in his lifa was in 1709, when his mother car tied him to the funeral of George Washington, so that he could always say that he had attended the burial of the first president of his country. j Mluor Newt IUnu. ' The Virginia gtand camp of confed erate veterans adopted a resolution to the effect that there could be no suc cessor to Miss Winnie Davis as the "'Daughter of the Confederacy," the title having expired with her doath. John D. Rockefeller will furnish funds to puichase the ground and to build n large social settlement house in the Italian district of Cleveland, Q. It will be called the Alta house in .lionor of Mr. Rockefeller's daughter. I .. . v " V t . . t t , LATER NEWS. A cabinet crisis is again reported to oe imminent in Spain. 1 The Cook county oirouit court has decided that the Chicago wheel-tax law is illegal. The Mississippi basin was visited by a sr-orm, ana considerable property loss has resulted. The postmaster at Sweet Home, Or., has been arrested for embezzlement. He made no returns to the government. 1 The British steamer Moana, which sailed from Sydney, N. S. W., for San Francisco, had on board 2,000,000 sov ereigns in gold. Extraordinary precautions are being taken by Palestine authorities to insure the safety of Emperor William during bis tour of the Holy Land. The Philippine insurgents have peaceably withdrawn to the distance desired by the Americans, except in Calocan, the northern suburb of Manila. Pardo Lncero, whose age, as shown by the records of the missions of Loa Angeles and Soledad, was 125 years, died at the oounty hospital at Salinas, Cal. A Kobe dispatch savs the .Tannnnon steamship Milagala sank after being in collision with the Japanese cruiser Kingsamaru. Sixty Japanese were drowned. A serious Indian outbreak has occur. red at Midas, Nye county, Nev., and the settlers have asked for arms and ammunition. Governor Sadler haa for warded 75 rifles and a supply of ammu nition. Further information, received from Forest, Miss., says that 14 is the num ber ot negroes killed m the Harpers ville race riot. The necrnea who. flnr) to the swamps have all made good tneir esoape, and the race conflict is now at an end. Spain wants the battleshins Drnonn - , o and Iowa recalled, and protests against tne united States sending the warships to Manila. She claims suoh action is in violation of the terms of the col, and that the status quo must be maintained until peace is concluded. Cotton buyers of Dallas, Tex., on for eign orders say that owing to the threatened war between Enwlnmi unrl Franoe they have received cables say ing: All shipments from Hiir data until otherwise instructed mnnt Via made subject to war lisks." Chanoine. the Frenoh minister nf war, has resigned. The total reeistration of voters in New York was 666,889, as against 676,- 193 In 1897. Fire broke out at pier No, 89, East river. Brooklvn. and did dam aaa t thn amount of f 500,000. A great improvement in re.nrirt.rl in the health of the Spanish troops at Ha vana during the past ton days. A movement to restrict thn town nf Pullman, III., to its charter limitations has been approved bv the supreme nnmt of that state. Another demonstration has been made in Havana by city officials who have not received their salaries for many months past. The steamer Reina de Los Angeles has returned to Santiago after carrying the Garcia and Cespedes faotions to Santa Crua del Sur to attend the Cuban assembly. American exports are increasing more rapidly than those of any other Countiy. In 1870 we had 7s per cent of the world's oommerce; now we have 13 per cent. Naval Constructor Richmond P. Hob- son has arrived home again. He be lieves the sunken Spanish warship Via caya can be saved, but it would cost $1,000,000 to rais her. Emperor William has designated a large fountain which he proposes to erect in Constantinope as a gift to com memorate his visit and that of Empress Victoria to the sultan's capital. The steamship Victoria brings news to Tacoma that two more battles have been fought in Formosa between Japan ese troops and the native savages, who seem bent on exterminating all the Japanese on the island. Aguinaldo is desirous of going to Paris for the purpose of appearing be fore the peace commissioners, says a Manila dispatch, but he is prevented from so doing by the joalouBies existing between the insurgent leaders. The principal fact brought out by the newest British blue book is that no offer to negotiate on the matter of poa session of Fushoda was ever made. The French papers now seem hopeful of a peaceful solution of the dispute. The oanal route survey has been com nloted and there is an iiH nfl nf civil engineers from Nicaragua. Louis w ickman, who has just arrived at New York ftom Grevtown. think Znlnva'a opinion as to the time of the expiration oi tne Maritime Canal Company's con cession is faulty. Time to the Yukon will be short ened as the result of the discovery of a ew channel for vessels. Steamers of moderate drauuht mav enter thn month of the river and ascend four or five hundred milos before trans-shipping. Expansion of territory under the new survey is important. Graham A. Yonne. of the arm on. gineera corps, who died at Willett's Point, was heir to over $1,000,000. Thomas Greenwald. a private in W. tery I, Seventh United States artillery. was snot dead wniie trying to desert from Fort Slocuua, near New Ko chelle, N. Y. The Candian senate is the most pa triarchial of contemporary upper houses, one-third ot its members being in the seventies, five in the eight ies and one 04. BRESSON MINISTRY R Affairs in France Reach Critical Stage. a CHANOINE FIRST TO GIVE UP Failure to Avenge the Intuits to the Army Led to the Downfall of the Government. Fans, Oct. 27. Minister of War inanoine resigned nis portfolio, fol lowed later by the resignation of the entire Brisson ministry. strong bodies of police were sta tioned in the neighborhood of the Palaoe Bourbon and the Place de la Concorde this morning to pt event the projected demonstration at tha oi me cnamoer oi deputies. , , . . -f-w-..g, Xhere was considerable rlinnrdnr about the approaches of the Palace Bourbon. Members of the-Learnm nf Patriots, who were crossing Palace de la Concorde, shouted "Vive l'arme," and republican guards were obliged to clear a passage. A conflict with tha police ensued, in whioh a number of anti-Semites attacked and injured the commissary of police, with loaded canes. The ringleader. M. finnrin. president of the Anti-Semitic League. was arrested. Wnen JV1. Drummont. the anti-Semitic leader arrived, there were runner Disturbances, with n u of "Down with the Jewel" and oheer ,ing for France. Xbe session of the chamber nf rlArtn. ties had no sooner opened that M. De rouledo made a violent attack npon the minister oi war, General Chanoine, thereupon the latter arose and ex plained the conditions under which he accepted the portfolio. In so doincr ha declared he was of the same opinion as nis predecessors, referring to the ques tion of reopening the Dreyfus case, a remark which was greeted with cheers. and protests. When Channi ne war able to resume speaking, he asserted he- was guardian oi the honor of the army, and concluded with savins ansrrilv: "I place in your hands the trust I re ceived, and I tender my resignation in, Wis trinune." After Chanoine's resignation. Pre mier Brisson stated that the govern ment was fully determined to uphold civil power against the military. The house suspended business that thn nm, mier might notify President Fanre of L.tianome'8 resignation. During the suspension committees of the various' parties agreed to support the order ot the day and postpone interpellations until Friday. The senate, after a brief session, adjourned. Alter the chamber of demities had resumed at 6 o'clock. M. Brisson an. nounced that the irregular resignation oi uenerai iinanoine had been accept ed, and that his successor ad interim. was appointed this evening. The pre mier then proposed that the chamber adjourn until Friday next, and con eluded his remarks with reaffirming tne supremacy of the civil power. ! After attempts on the part of the various deputies to discuss the alleged military plots, the insults to the army, etc., their remarks being punctuated With interruptions and nhaara. M Ri. bot, in behalf of his friends, including ,M. Meline, approved M. Brisson's state ment and added: 'We have every confidence in the army, and do not wish to see it at tacked. All republicans are united on ,this subject." ! M. DeMahy then proposed a resolu tion calling upon the government to end the campaign of insult against the army, but Brisson refused to aocept it M. Cavaignao, the ex-minister of war, then rushed to the tribune and demanded an immediate discussion of the resolution. He was greeted with 9iostile shouts, including "Sabrel" ("Forgery") "Razorl" which caused a great uproar. The shouting of the word "razor" was an allusion to the isuicide of Lieutenant-Colonel . Henry, who is said to have cut his throat in his cell at the fortress of Montevalerien after confessing to having forged one of the' Dreyfus documents, though it has since been claimed the razor with whioh the deed was committed was not found in the cell of deceased. M. Biisson then acoopted the order of the day, proposed by M. Ribot. affirming the supremaoy. of the civil over the military power. Several of the deputies attempted to speak, but thoir voices were drowned in the up roar whil'h filtnnorl in Itio n,.,,.,K... . u v.. vnnuiurr. The ordor of the day was apopted by a' vote oi asa ayes to 2 noes. An amend ment proposed by M. Berge, censuring the government, "for not causing the honor of the army to be respected," was lost by 274 to 261 votes. M. De Mahy thon again proposed his resolu tion calling npon the government to end the "oampaign of insult against the armv." The president rnfnwul tr, n,. oept the motion, howevei, and a vote was taken on it, amid so much confu sion that scrutiny was ilnmandod Later, this showed that the government was defeated by a vote of 296 to 243. ' After the result nf the anrnfinv ui lieen announced, M. Beteau moved a vote of confidence in M. Brisson, which was rejected, 286 to 264. When this vote was declared, the ministers left the chamber. Floating Rook Will Be Our. Washington, Oct. 27. Naval officers who have visited Havana harhnr rn. cently have reported that the fine new steel floating drydock, whioh was pur chased by the Spanish eovernment in England and towed la Flava na nnfc prior to the outbreak of the war, can not ue moved, owing to neglect on the part of Spanish officers, also to their inability to properly manage thn iWlt The structure is large enough to take SOUTHERN RACE WAR. Eleven Negroes 'and One White Man Dead at Forest. New Orleans, La., Oct 26. The Picayune's Forest, Miss., special says: Eleven dead negroes and one dead white man, and one negro and three white men seriously wounded, is the result at this writing of the bloody war being waged between the white and black raoes in the Harpersville neigh borhood, of this (Scott) county. Sev eral of the rioters have been oaptured and lodged in jail at Forest today, but the others escaped into the swamp. Large crowd of white men are in oloso pursuit, however, and more names are hourly expeotod to be added to the death list It is impossible to obtain a full list the killed, for the reason that some the negroes Were shot down in the woods and were hurriedly buried by the whites where they fell. Governor McLaurin went to Harpers ille last n it'll t and annealed tn tha whites not to molest the prisoners in the custody of the sheriff. He final! persuaded the crowd topormitthe sher iff to take the prisoners to jail. Sheriff Stevenson had rUc4 ad.lit.itmal mianls at the Forest jail to prvwni th lynch ing oi tiiei rwtwn ew in twstviy. The negroes who aw utuW artxist. tnd full confession. WHAT THE WAR COST. Chicago, Cvt 5. A sno-cUl to te Tribune from Washincur. savs; Unci Sam'a expense for U,s Spanish war sink into insignificance whn compared itn the cost of the conflict betwa the states. Thus far the war with Spain has cost 167,529,941. or frac tion over f 1,000,000 per dav since the beginning of hostilities April 21 against the enormous sum of (3.065. 413, lot) during the civil war, or an average of $1,685,156 per day. xne largest amount paid out in a single day during the war with Spain was 14,110.000. Julv 28. or nearly enough to construct and equip a first- - - ' w class battle-ship. The next highest days were September 19, when $3,775. 000 was spent, and July 19, with a to tal oi fa,770,ooo, but the daily ex penses frequently run above the $3. 000.000 mark. The budget for the four months of the present fiscal' rear was $135,113, 540, while the exepndi- V tures for the whole fiscal year of 1897. were only $83,511,713, and for this month the average of $1,000,000 per aay was maintained. In April the expenses for the armv anu navy were considerably above nor mal figures, when they reached $19, 000,000. May showed a peroeptible increase, wnen $30,000,000 was spent June was a further increase, ft29.00.li.. 000 passing over the tieasury counter, and July showed the highest expend iture Of $43,000,000. The next month witnessed a decrease, only $31,000,000 being spent, but September reaohed nearly $32,000,000, and for the 22 aays oi uctober tne expenses wera about $19,000,000, or nearly $1,000,- 000 per day. The total disbursements of the government for the four months of the present fisoal year, which in. eluded the civil list, pension payments and interest on the publio debt, was $223,587 114. The total recainta wr only $153,754,445, showing a deficit of o,uuuu,uuu lor tne fiscal year. The $3,000,000 spent on the operations of the army and navy during the war of me reoeuion includes the period of the first three months of 1861. when active preparations for hostilities were being made, and the last nine months of 1865, when the expenses of the govern ment were nnususally heavy. Hawaiian! Want a Cable. Washington, Oct. 26. Of the sev eral commissions adjusting the rela tions of the United States towards its newly acquired possessions, the Hawa iians will be the first ready with a bill for the consideration of congress. This, of onurse. will make provisions for the government of the island, but. aside from this matter, there will hn another of the utmost importance. It will provide for the construction of a cable between the Hawaiian islands and the United States. Owing to the growing trade with this new territory and the necessity of havinir nninlt means of communication with its nm. cials there, congress will probably sub sidize a cable. Four New Record!. Norwood, Mass.. Oct 26. Four new American bicycle road records wera made today over . a measured mile by Frank Ourish, of DorcheBter. Mass. The first was the paced mile, flvinu start, which was covered in 1:41 1-6, the previous record boing 1:45, made by W. II. Dodge, of Lowell. Ourish next made the mile paced, standing start, in 1:45 8-5, the old record being held by Dodge in 1:53. The third re- oord was the one-mile unrated, stand ing start, which was made in 2:11 1-5, the previous record being 2:16 4-5. bv C. A. Foster of Torre nauto. Intl. With the aid of F. Wold, Ourish broke the tandem mile paced, standing start in 1:54 8-5, the old record being 1:55 1-5. made by Hulman and Fercuaon. also of Torre Haute. Controller Treadwell. of the trensnrv department, has decided that post-office inspectors are entitled to a per diem of $4 for expenses only when on duty out side of offices. Two Treapaftere Killed. Leadville. Colo., Oct. 26. While walking on- the tracks of the D. & R. G. railroad, on their way from church, Mrs. Cornelius Shea and daughter, Margaret, were struok by a passenger rain and almost lnsuntly killed. Rich Treasure Ship. Sydney. N. S. W.. Oct 26. Tha British steamer Moanoa. which aailwt from here for San Francisco vestenlav. bad on board 3,000,000 sovereigns in goiu. Overwhelmed by Tide Rips in Turnagain Arm. NINE MEN WERE DROWNED Two Searching Parties Have Been Bent Out to Find the Mining; Men Im poitlble to Swim Alhoro. Sunrise, Alaska, Sept. 23. A small sloop was wrecked in Turnagain arm early in the morning of September 16 and nine men lost their, lives by the ao cident. The men were: Kit Carson Payne, of Portland, Or.; Frank L. Rob inson, of Santa Crnz, Cal.; A. M Adams, of Bellevue, Pa.; Louis E. Zim mer and J. M. Bonner, of Pittsburg, Pa.; M. Walcott and his son Oliver, of Now York; Mr. Scott, of Scottsburg, III., and Chris Johnson, of Sunrise City, owner of the sloop. This three-ton sloop left Peter's Creak landing, on Kulk arm, the even itig of the 15th, bound for Sunrise City, ntar the head of Turnagain arm. She was overloaded so that her deck was ornly ix inches above the water, and some of the mou objected to making the trip with her on that aocount, but thoy all lrted finally. She left with favoring wind and smooth water. At about 12 o'clock the sloop passed Fire island and steered toward the entrance to TurnAiain .'arm, some 20 miles away, This wm tbe last that was seen of the Johnson sloop or her passengers, Somewhere between the island arm the tide ripa overwhelmed and swamped the overloaded boat The dog belong ing to the sloop swam to the south shore and made its way to the mining camps on Bird creek, and was brought from there to Sunrise. The steamer Pery brought in the small skiff belong ing to the Bloop, whioh was found float ing bottom np near Tyonic. Broken pieoes of the sloops' cabin and several small articles were found on the north shore by Mr. Duncan, of this place. Two searching parties have been out from this town, where the men have many friends and acquaintances, but none of the bodies have been found. It is probable that all the men but John son were asleep in the hold when the sloop was swamped, and were carried down with it. It would have been ira possible for a man to swim ashore from tbe middle of the rough channel where the disaster occurred. Several. of these men had just leturned from tbe Copper and Tanana rivers, by way of the new trail just opened by Captain Glenn's party. They were feeling jubilant ovei the discoveries they had made, and were going baok with supplies this winter. The entrance . to Turnagain arm, al the northeastern extremity of Cook inlet, is known as the most perilous water in this part of the world. Tbe arm is really a rocky cayon, and three to hve miles wide. With precipitous mountains rising abruptly on eaoh side, it extends nearly through tbe Coast range of mountains. In fact the large glacier at the eastern end extendi over the narrow ridge of mountains and joins that from Portage bay on Prinoe William sound. Through this deep and rocky gorge the wind and tide rush with terrible force. The tides rise and fall some 50 feet and run like a torrent over miles of mud flats and reefs of ragged rook. A power fnl steamer can make no headway against them, and a sailing vessel entering the arm is entirely at their mercy, unless the wind happens to be very favorable. Here, when the wind is in certain di rections, the waters pile pp and a tidal wave sweeps in like a rushing 'wall ol water. Adams, Bonner, Payne, Ziramer and Scott loft for the Copper river country last February, going over the Valdes glacier and thence 90 miles np Copper river. From there they followed th Nalcheena waters of tbe Matamuska, which flows into Knik arm. Thers they built a double-end Scow, 24 feet long and 6 feet wide, and started for civilization. They made the 175 miles to Knik in just 12 hours, so swift is th stream, and called at Stone's camp known as Knik City. They arrived there the latter part of August, and remained until they started on the voy age that ended in their death, and the death of the four others who had joined them there. Robinson, ' was a well known baseball , player in California. The Walootts had intended starting store at Sunrise City. , , Several parties have made quartz and placer locations in the mountains west of the Matamuska river, and will send in their supplies this winter.' Many miners from this district will try to Bled their outfits over the new trail as far as Copper river this winter, and many others will pack in their sup plies with horses next spring. Anarehiata Follow Emperor William. Haifa, Palestine, Oct. 28. The police made an important arrest of a well known anaicliist here yesterday. Ex troardinary precautions are being taken to insure the safety of Emperor Wil liam and Empress Augusta Victoria. During the time that they are here veiled women will not be allowed in the streets, as the police fear that an archists might assume these disguises. To Save the Yiicaya. ' Santiago de CuDa, Oct. 25. It is re ported from Guantanamo that Naval Constructor Hobson, who left there early last week for Jamaica, is going to Washington to obtain an appropria tion, if possible, of $1,000,000, for the purpose of raising the snnken Spanish cruiser Visoaya. Tha plana for rais ing the Cristobal Colon have been per fected, and the work is progressing in accordance with , the instructions of Hobson, who expects to return horn MAY BE TROUBLE THERE. Attitude of Philippine IniurgenU I Menacing Dewejr and Otil Prepared. Manila, Oct. 25. The attitude of the insurgent troops has become very menacing. Their supplies are growing scarce, and they are becoming desper ate. Their leader assured the troops, who have had no pay for months, that they will soon capture Manila. Tbe Filipino newspapers insist upon absolute independence, and denounce annexation to the United States or any protectorate with equal energy, Tbe American authorities, naval and military, are taking precautionary measures, although no immediate trouble is anticipated. The commission of Spaniards sent here reoently by General Bios, Spain's ohief representative in the Philippines and governor-general of the southern portions of the archipelago, arranged a temporary commercial convention. Ac cordingly inter-island traffic was re sumed, but it is now again interrupted, this time by orders from General Rios. The steamer San Nicholas, which left Manila yesterday flying the American flag, was compelled to return by a Spanish gunboat, whose commander offered as a plea for his aotion that the orew consisted of Filipinos, who might smuggle contraband articles. The San Nicholas, after reporting her experience, sailed again, followed by the United! States gunboat McCullooh. The insurgent steamer Muirola en tered tbe harbor flying the insurgent flag, which was promptly hauled down by the Americans. , Yesterday tbe British consul at Ma nila convened a meeting of merchants to discuss the commercial deadlock. British capital to the amount of $200, 000,000 has been lying idle here for sir months. In the existing conditions, business relations with tbe provinces have been in many cases directly sus pended. The meeting resolved to make an urgent appeal to the British govern- ment to endeavor to hasten a settle ment of pending issues. BRINK OF WAR. France Preparing for It; England Ready Only Diplomacy Can Avert It. , London, Oct. 25. Never since Great Britain and France bgan to disncte over Egypt, nor during the most aoute stage of the Niger differences between those countries, has the situation looked so ominOuB as today. In spite of the hope expressed in the journals of both oountriea that tha nmttnr would be amioably arranged, it is a laot tnat tne Jf rench naval and military authorities are makinir feverish nrnnar. ations for war, and, though calm reigns at the British dockyards at Portsmouth, Chatham and Devonport, it is only the calm of preparedness. Significant orders have heen arriving there from the admiralty, indicating tnat Ureat Britain and France are on the brink of war. Tha arimirnltv hao ordered every seagoing warship to have us crew maae up to the lull comple ment, as ordered in case of mobiliza tion. The order praotioally means the complete filling prospectively of every ship's company in detail. Four tor. pedo-boat destroyers whioh worn ahnnt to be fitted with new water-tube boilers have had their orders countermanded, and will be instructed to redraw their Btores. Officers on leaves of ahaennn- and unemployed have been notified to hold themselves in readiness to com mission reserves if required. ine urenoh statesmen, however, still cling to the hope that the Marquis of Salisbury will offer some exchange. NINE BLACKS KILLED. One White Man Lout HI Lire and Three . were Wounded. Memphis. Tenn.. fint 9 K A noniol j to the Commercial-Anneal from Unrpot Miss., says: As the result of an at tempt to arrest a negro near Harpers ville, Scott county, in tha of the state, one white denntv w killed, three WOunrlnd. nn,1 to the latest report, nine negroes were-" Jiiiiea Dy tne citizens of the Harpers ville neighborhood and thn aimrifTV poBse combined. Ibe pursuit of ahnnt Rn had joined the original offender, with wie ayowea determination to prevent his airest and capture, and who am bushed the party attempting the arrest, continues, and bv mnrnino tha nn,i,. of fatalities will undoubtedly have as sumed large proportions. The wbol country is terribly aroused, .and the 1 met i , . . , onojiu ft posse nas oeen reinforced with men from all thn nniahrmrinn t..., Governor McLaurin has gone to the scene, which is about. in miim nnrth Forest, the nearest railroad point. A DIED ON THE VOYAGE. Death of Seven Sick ' Bold len Ing From Manila. Pan Francisco. Oct. 25 Tha nn;t States transport steamer Ri arrived here today from Manila, via iiong j&ong and .Nagasaki. She has on board 140 sick soldiers, anrl oi a. charged men. Seven men died on the voyage. They were: Private Eliot W. Ordwav. (Vim nan v H, Seoond Oregon; Private- Henry 11. oiuoe, company i), mrst California; Sergeant John A Glover, onmnnnv A First Nebraska! Private Frank W. Tucker, company' C. Twaniv.thi i-. fantry; Private Lewis D. Passmore, company l, mrst Nebraska; Private Henry P. Shuter. A fltnr liattorTi. ro tate J. Fiske. First California All the dead were bnrinil at m ac cept Ordwuy, Piske and Shuter. Race War In Texas. Fort Worth. Tex.; Ont. between whites and blacks over politics enlminated in a fight in whioh Hope Adams, independent candwlnia sheriff and leader of the independent movement against the White Men's Union Association, was shot and fcnu.i The sheriff has wired Governor Culbart- son tnat be is unable to preserve order and wants troops sent to the seen in any of our battle-ships. I Within a month. " . . . ,. at once. . ... ......